AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the rare condition of multicentric high-grade glioma (MC HGG), comparing surgical outcomes in patients and existing literature to assess potential advantages of surgery.
  • A retrospective analysis was conducted on 16 patients with MC HGG, revealing factors such as age, performance status, and the extent of tumor resection significantly correlate with better prognosis.
  • The findings suggest that while MC gliomas are associated with poor outcomes, aggressive surgical intervention may improve survival rates, challenging the belief that they develop from lower-grade gliomas.

Article Abstract

Introduction: The simultaneous presence of multiple foci of high-grade glioma is a rare condition with a poor prognosis. By definition, if an anatomical connection through white matter bundles cannot be hypothesized, multiple lesions are defined as multicentric glioma (MC); on the other hand, when this connection exists, it is better defined as multifocal glioma (MF). Whether surgery can be advantageous for these patients has not been established yet. The aim of our study was to critically review our experience and to compare it to the existing literature.

Materials And Methods: Retrospective analysis of patients operated on for MC HGG in two Italian institutions was performed. Distinction between MC and MF was achieved through revision of MR FLAIR images. Clinical and radiological preoperative and postoperative data were analyzed through chart revision and phone interviews. The same data were extracted from literature review. Univariate and multivariate analyses were conducted for the literature review only, and the null hypothesis was rejected for a -value ≥ 0.05.

Results: Sixteen patients met the inclusion criteria; male predominance and an average age of 66.5 years were detected. Sensory/motor deficit was the main onset symptom both in clinical study and literature review. A tendency to operate on the largest symptomatic lesion was reported and GTR was reached in the majority of cases. GBM was the histological diagnosis in most part of the patients. OS was 8.7 months in our series compared to 7.5 months from the literature review. Age ≤ 70 years, a postoperative KPS ≥ 70, a GTR/STR, a second surgery and adjuvant treatment were shown to be significantly associated with a better prognosis. Pathological examination revealed that MC HGG did not originate by LGG.

Conclusions: MC gliomas are rare conditions with high malignancy and a poor prognosis. A maximal safe resection should be attempted whenever possible, especially in younger patients with life-threatening large mass.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8544720PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/tomography7040045DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

literature review
20
high-grade glioma
8
poor prognosis
8
review
6
literature
5
patients
5
worth considering
4
considering multicentric
4
multicentric high-grade
4
glioma
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!